Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:does AT have an instagram college decisions page?
Yes.
So far there's
VCU
Mason
Syracuse
Purdue
Virginia Tech
Very on brand for AT placement, with its Duel Enrollment and very hands on curriculum.
A single Ivy placement could be any number of independent hooks.
There are only single placements into the TT Ivies from any of the APS HSs.
Last year’s acceptances: Harvard (1 HB, 1 WF, 2 WL), Yale: 1 WL, UPenn: 2 WF, MIT: 1 WF, 2WL, Princeton: 0
What is WF?
It’s Wakefield, commonly referred to as WHS on DCUM, so that WF = WHS.
Is there any admits from YHS?
There’s curiosity about how many FGLI and QuestBridge students were included, particularly since Arlington Magazine lists highlighted them as a common hook for Ivy from APS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:does AT have an instagram college decisions page?
Yes.
So far there's
VCU
Mason
Syracuse
Purdue
Virginia Tech
Very on brand for AT placement, with its Duel Enrollment and very hands on curriculum.
A single Ivy placement could be any number of independent hooks.
There are only single placements into the TT Ivies from any of the APS HSs.
Last year’s acceptances: Harvard (1 HB, 1 WF, 2 WL), Yale: 1 WL, UPenn: 2 WF, MIT: 1 WF, 2WL, Princeton: 0
What is WF?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:does AT have an instagram college decisions page?
Yes.
So far there's
VCU
Mason
Syracuse
Purdue
Virginia Tech
Very on brand for AT placement, with its Duel Enrollment and very hands on curriculum.
A single Ivy placement could be any number of independent hooks.
There are only single placements into the TT Ivies from any of the APS HSs.
Last year’s acceptances: Harvard (1 HB, 1 WF, 2 WL), Yale: 1 WL, UPenn: 2 WF, MIT: 1 WF, 2WL, Princeton: 0

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Can we keep this on the neighborhood schools and not make another Arlington Tech thread?
Is there any way to have the teachers engage with students who are quiet? Maybe an afterschool tutoring program?
Ok but sometimes the neighborhood schools are not the best fit for every kid. that's why people gave other suggestions. carry on.
The only other options are a tech focused program and an impossible Unicorn? I just want the teachers to get to know their students, not just the high need and discipline students, but also the ones quietly falling behind.
I don’t think that exists in most very large schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Can we keep this on the neighborhood schools and not make another Arlington Tech thread?
Is there any way to have the teachers engage with students who are quiet? Maybe an afterschool tutoring program?
Ok but sometimes the neighborhood schools are not the best fit for every kid. that's why people gave other suggestions. carry on.
The only other options are a tech focused program and an impossible Unicorn? I just want the teachers to get to know their students, not just the high need and discipline students, but also the ones quietly falling behind.
I don’t think that exists in most very large schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:does AT have an instagram college decisions page?
Yes.
So far there's
VCU
Mason
Syracuse
Purdue
Virginia Tech
Very on brand for AT placement, with its Duel Enrollment and very hands on curriculum.
A single Ivy placement could be any number of independent hooks.
There are only single placements into the TT Ivies from any of the APS HSs.
Last year’s acceptances: Harvard (1 HB, 1 WF, 2 WL), Yale: 1 WL, UPenn: 2 WF, MIT: 1 WF, 2WL, Princeton: 0
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:does AT have an instagram college decisions page?
Yes.
So far there's
VCU
Mason
Syracuse
Purdue
Virginia Tech
Very on brand for AT placement, with its Duel Enrollment and very hands on curriculum.
A single Ivy placement could be any number of independent hooks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Can we keep this on the neighborhood schools and not make another Arlington Tech thread?
Is there any way to have the teachers engage with students who are quiet? Maybe an afterschool tutoring program?
Ok but sometimes the neighborhood schools are not the best fit for every kid. that's why people gave other suggestions. carry on.
The only other options are a tech focused program and an impossible Unicorn? I just want the teachers to get to know their students, not just the high need and discipline students, but also the ones quietly falling behind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wakefield parent here: teachers know my kid. Kid seems to have had overlap with a group of learners. The Spanish immersion kids also are grouped together. Kid is introverted, shy to engage adults but it is working. We are very happy with the school, teachers and how our kid is learning. We also worried it would feel too large and kid would be lost in the crowd. It isn't the case.
Wakefield will feel smaller because there is some natural cohorting, about 50% of kids take AP, vs 90% at WL, so if you are one of the college bound graduates you will likely stand out more and see the same people more often. Same thing happens at ACHS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Can we keep this on the neighborhood schools and not make another Arlington Tech thread?
Is there any way to have the teachers engage with students who are quiet? Maybe an afterschool tutoring program?
Make your kids go to the teachers office hours.
Do they have office hours at WL? Is that their planning period? Do you get a pass from your current class to visit other subjects?
I’m a teacher. My planning periods are for me to grade, plan, attend meetings, or cover other teachers’ classes. This time isn’t available for students; they are in class anyway.
However, I’m available before school each day for at least 30 minutes and after school for at least an hour. Most of my coworkers are, too. These are the times we meet with students.
Anonymous wrote:DP. So the small cohort ends after 9th grade then the kids are thrown into the mix together? Wow.
FWIW I have the “interesting” kid who is NOT shy and I get greeted with big grins from the security guard on up with “OH you are LARLO’S mom!” … it is a mixed blessing and sometimes wish I had the kid no teachers had reason to know! Trust.
I think smaller cohorts would probably be good for both types of kids - my kid who benefits from adults who can really get to know him warts and all; and the quieter kids who need more attention.